I’m still not sure what I think
about the color change. Don’t get me wrong, I love the purple, but it’s been
blue for so long that I’m still getting used to it.
Well, it has been a good Spring
Break. I spent half of it on a mission trip to Charleston, MO.
Monday: Spent the day door
knocking and asking people if we could have Bible studies with them.
Tuesday: Cleaned out basements,
houses, and windows or the elderly.
Wednesday: More door knocking and
service projects.
We also went to Lamberts and
Boomland. Both are awesome and I would recommend going. My favorite part was
fellowshipping with other Christians. Also, stepping outside my comfort zone
and trying to get Bible studies with complete strangers was pretty cool. I was
terrified at first, but I was starting to get the hang of it at the end. I had
never really done any door knocking before, so it was good experience.
In other news, I like making video
game-themed jewelry and some of it found its way online. (Shameless
Advertising) https://www.etsy.com/shop/SavvyGems
Also, I’m not exactly one part
ahead. I’m mostly done with the next part and I’m still working on it, but I
wanted to get this posted.
Hey, this semester is passed the
halfway point. It’s all downhill from here, right? …. Right? …maybe?
Here’s another part of the story.
~*~*~*~*~
The Promised Land: (Part 7) Toy Soldiers
Eden sat on the ground with her
legs crossed. “He took all our gear.”
“Including my best artillery,”
Caden lamented.
Shiloh held up his hands with his
index and middle fingers touching and waved them apart. After a moment of
silence, Caden turned to his brother. “You could have saved the bacon, you know.”
“We have bacon?” Eden asked.
“Not anymore. Now that that’s over
with…” Caden stood beside Eden and extended an open hand. “Can I have the
package back?”
Eden reached into her pocket and
pulled out the odd parcel. She stared at it for a few moments, turning it over
in her hands. It wasn’t all that big, maybe six inches in length. It felt like
a sturdy box beneath the brown paper wrapping, tied with hemp twine. Eden’s
curiosity grew as she wondered why Caden tried to hide it from the soldiers.
She looked up at Caden for an answer, but found him glaring at her through
crimson eyes.
“Can I have it back… please?”
Eden held the package close and
leaned away from Caden. “Why is it so important?”
“That’s none of your business.”
Eden pointed in the direction of
the vehicles, steadily becoming upset. “You knew those soldiers would kill you if
they found out we had it. If I’m traveling with you, it IS my business! I
deserve to know!”
Caden remained stoic, his voice
void of any emotion. “You don’t deserve anything. Now give it back.”
She stood up and backed away with
a brazen glare. “What if I don’t want to?”
In a split second, Caden drew his
handgun and leveled it with Eden’s face.
“WHOA! Hey now!” Eden jumped back
and raised both hands. “Put that thing away!”
Caden made no move to lower the
gun. In fact, he hardly moved at all as he spoke in a firm, calm voice. “Not
until you give it back.”
His apathetic command scared Eden
more than his irritated smart talk normally would.
“Fine, keep the dumb box! Take
it!” Eden’s hand shook as she held out the package.
As promised, Caden didn’t put the
weapon away until he had the parcel back in his possession. His eyes didn’t
turn back to black until after he had the package either. As soon as he had it,
he loosened up and spoke with his usual sarcastic flavor. “I knew you could be
reasoned with.”
He handed the brown object to
Shiloh, who had come closer to the pair after watching the events unfold from a
safe distance. Shiloh tucked the parcel into his case and slung it over his
shoulder. He then pulled out a small, electronic device from one of his
pockets. Shiloh tapped it a few times and showed it to his brother. Caden
nodded and looked at Eden. “Shall we keep moving?”
“Are you kidding? I’m not going
anywhere with you!” Eden said with her hands balled into fists at her side.
Caden shrugged and began walking
away. “Your funeral.”
Shiloh lingered behind his brother
and motioned for Eden to follow.
“Thanks, Shiloh, but there’s no
way I’m hanging around a PSYCHOPATH WITH A GUN!!” Eden shouted the last part to
make sure Caden heard her.
He kept walking, but still replied.
“I’d hate to be in your shoes when you come across wild animals. Or bandits. Or
more soldiers, for that matter.”
“At least they’d treat me better
than you do!” Eden folded her arms and turned her back to them.
“Wanna bet?” Caden muttered.
Eden gazed at the wilderness around
her. Rolling hills of brown grass and black splotches of dirt spread out before
her. The trees that weren’t broken were bare, black branches reaching to an
overcast sky. The clouds were not as green as they were back at Freedom. Here,
they were more of a steel grey color. Except for the wind and crunch of Caden’s
boots on the ground, silence enveloped the scene. No people. No birds. Come to
think of it, Eden hadn’t seen any animals at all. Her imagination kicked in as
she wondered if they were all killed off or if they mutated along with the
humans. Speaking of humans, she wasn’t thrilled about the idea of running into
more soldiers. Her last two encounters did not leave a good impression. She was
thinking about why people in the future seemed so fond of pointing dangerous weapons
at her when she realized Caden stopped walking.
He looked over his shoulder and
said, “If you’re not coming, I want my coat back.”
Pursing her lips and deciding once
again to stay with the crazy drifters, Eden shoved her hands into her pockets
and marched toward Caden and Shiloh.
“Thought not,” Caden muttered as
he and Shiloh resumed walking.
They went along for ten minutes or
so before Eden cautiously spoke up. “So… that box… If it’s so important to you,
why didn’t you just shoot the soldiers? Or keep driving? I mean, when armed soldiers
drive up, you chicken out. But when it comes down to a helpless girl, you pull
out a gun. I don’t get it.”
“It ‘s mandatory to give any
vehicle bearing the national flag the right of way. I was trying to keep us
under the radar. I was hoping they wouldn’t stop.”
“But they did and the first thing
you do is hide the box.”
“You do realize it was nine against
three, right?”
“So?” Eden rolled her eyes. “That’s
only a three to one ration.”
“It wasn’t worth it,” Caden said
as he kicked a rock in his path. “Blood upon blood doesn’t help anyone.”
“Didn’t stop you from aiming a gun
at me,” Eden said with a sidelong glare.
“For the record, I wasn’t actually
going to shoot you.”
“Pfft, like I’m going to believe
that.” Eden struggled to keep anything excessively rude from escaping her mouth.
Caden shrugged as he walked along.
“I don’t expect you to believe me. I just thought it was worth mentioning.”
“What about that guy back there?
He pulled a gun on you and you didn’t even blink.”
“He wasn’t going to kill me.”
“How do you know?”
Caden hesitated for a moment
before answering, “He was a different shade of blue.”
Eden recalled that the commander’s
uniform was navy blue. “What does that mean? You kill them based on fashion
choice?”
“You wouldn’t understand,” he said
with a sigh.
“I could if you explained it.”
“You still wouldn’t get it.” Caden
increased his pace so he was ahead of the two. He didn’t say anything more,
just kept walking.
Eden exchanged glances with
Shiloh, who had been walking beside Caden up to this point. Shiloh shrugged and
some of his silver hair fell into his eyes. Eden thought back on the discussion
between Caden and the weirdo.
“It’s because I’m a Pure, isn’t
it?” she asked finally.